Narrator: Section 4 You will hear a talk on the topic of time perspectives. First you have sometime to look at questions 31 to 40.
[20 seconds Listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.
Speaker Today, I’m going to be talking about time. Specifically I’ll be looking at how people think about time, and how these time perspectives structure our lives. According to social psychologists, there are six ways of thinking about time, which are called personal time zones. The first two are based in the past. Past positive thinkers spend most of their
time in a state of nostalgia, fondly remembering moments such as birthdays, marriages and important achievements in their life. These are the kinds of people who keep family records, books and photo albums. People living in the past negative timezone are also absorbed by earlier times, but they focus on all the bad things – regrets,
failures, poor decisions. They spend a lot of time thinking about how life could have been. Then, we have people who live in the present. Present hedonists are driven by pleasure and immediate sensation. Their life motto is to have a good time and avoid pain. Present fatalists live in the moment too, but they believe this moment is the product of circumstances entirely beyond their control it’s their fate. Whether it’s poverty, religion or society itself, something stops these people from believing they can play a role in changing their outcomes in life. Life simply is and that’s that. Looking at the future timezone, we can see that people classified as future active are the planners and go-getters. They work rather than play and resist temptation. Decisions are made based
on potential consequences, not on the experience itself. A second future-orientated perspective, future fatalistic, is driven by the certainty of life after death
and some kind of a judgement day when they will be assessed on how virtuously they have lived and what success they have had in their lives. Okay, let’s move on. You might ask how do these time
zones affect our lives Well, let’s start at the beginning. Everyone is brought into this world as a present hedonist. No exceptions. Our initial needs and demands – to be warm, secure, fed and watered – all stem from the present moment. But things change when we enter formal education – we’re taught to stop existing in the moment and to begin thinking about future outcomes. But, did you know that every nine seconds a child in the USA drops out of school For boys, the rate is much higher than for girls. We could easily say Ah, well, boys just aren’t as bright as girls but the evidence doesn’t support this. A recent study
states that boys in America, by the age of twenty one, have spent 10,000 hours playing video games. The research suggests that they’ll never fit in the traditional classroom because these boys require a situation where they have the ability to manage their own learning environment. Now, let’s look at the way we do prevention education. All prevention education is aimed at a future timezone. We say “don’t smoke or you’ll get cancer, get good grades or you won’t get a good job. But with present-orientated kids that just doesn’t work. Although they understand the potentially negative consequences of their actions, they persist with the behaviour because they’re not living for the future they’re in the moment right now. We can’t use logic and it’s no use reminding them of potential fallout from their decisions or previous errors of judgment – we’ve got to get in their minds just as they’re about to make a choice. Time perspectives make a big difference in how we value and use our time. When Americans
are asked how busy they are, the vast majority report being busier than ever before. They admit to sacrificing their relationships, personal time and a goodnight s sleep for their success. Twenty years ago, 60% of Americans had sit-down dinners with their families, and now only 20% do. But when they’re asked what they would
do with an eight-day week, they say Oh that’d be great. They would spend that time labouring away to achieve more. They’re constantly trying to get ahead, to get toward a future point of happiness.
So, it’s really important to be aware of how other people think about time. We tend to think Oh, that person’s really irresponsible or That guy’s power hungry but often what we’re looking at is not fundamental differences of personality, but really just different ways of thinking about time. Seeing these conflicts as differences
in time perspective, rather than distinctions of character, can facilitate more effective cooperation between people and get the most out of each person’s individual strengths. Narrator That is the end of section 4. You now have half a minute to check your answers.
[30 seconds That is the end of the listening test. You now have 10 minutes to transfer your answers to the listening answer sheet.